Related posts

One thought on “Kony 2012”

A charity whose tactics have been criticized is making traction online with a video, “KONY 2012,” that aims to bring down the leader of a cult-like rebel army in Africa.

The 30-minute documentary, which has had more than 7 million YouTube downloads, was made by Invisible Children, a charity that wants Joseph Kony, head of the Lord’s Resistance Army, to face trial in an international court on charges of using children as soldiers and other human rights crimes in Uganda.

A recent Foreign Affairs report challenged the tactics used by the charity and several others, saying they had exaggerated the scale of Kony’s crimes.

“The film has reached a place in the global consciousness where people know who Kony is, they know his crimes,” Jenkins added. “Kids know and they respond. And then they won’t allow it to happen anymore.”

On Tuesday, the UN refugee agency said the Lord’s Resistance Army had launched a new spate of attacks in the northeastern region Democratic Republic of Congo this year after a lull in the second half of 2011.

But Mounoubai Madnodje, a spokesman for the UN’s Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo, said the LRA was on its last legs.

“We think right now it’s the last gasp of a dying organization that’s still trying to make a statement,” he said. Madnodje said there are only about 200 LRA fighters left.

The LRA, which emerged in northern Uganda in the late 1990s, is believed to have killed, kidnapped and mutilated thousands of people. Kony is wanted by the International Criminal Court, the African Union, which has designated it as a terrorist group.

In October the United States sent 100 military personnel, mainly special forces, to train and advise the forces fighting against the LRA.